Thursday, August 30, 2007
Neat
I am always finding new and better things in terms of computers and the internet. If you know me, you are aware that I am quite the Mac fan. Yesterday I purchased iWork mainly for the program Keynote, a slicker and more graphics friendly program similar to PowerPoint. One of the great features of Keynote is the ability to export the presentation as a flash file. So you can view last night's presentation, "Jesus on the Silver Screen" on our webpage. Sadly, not all of the fantastic transitions were exported. This program is incredible. So, go and watch last nights program....just click on the box to advance to the next slide.
Monday, August 27, 2007
Monday, August 20, 2007
Homecoming
Last night I had the pleasure of going back to the first church I ever served as pastor, Calhoun Falls United Methodist Church. The current pastor, recognizing the church and town is quickly dying, is trying to move forward by remembering the past. Using the 12 stones Joshua had stacked as the Hebrews crossed the Jordon to remember what had happened, we gathered last night with stones to remember what God has done so the church could move forward. I'm not going to post my sermon because it had a lot of specifics to the people and events in that church and community but I am posting an article I wrote for the True Citizen:
This Sunday night I am returning to my roots. In a former life I was United Methodist. I like to tell Marshall that I was United Methodist before I became a Christian. I’m kidding, of course, and Marshall puts up with me or at least he pretends. 8 years ago next month I was sent by the United Methodist Bishop of South Carolina to a tiny church in northwest South Carolina to serve as their pastor. This was the town of my father’s family. It was actually the church of my father’s family; in fact, my grandmother and aunt were still active members (I didn’t tell the higher-ups about this connection). The town of Calhoun Falls is about one sixth the size of Waynesboro; perhaps just over a thousand souls live there. The rumor was Calhoun Falls received her name after John C. Calhoun fell off his horse nearby, ergo, Calhoun Falls. The United Methodist Church in Calhoun Falls looks like thousands of other churches built near mill villages in the South around the same time; tall steeple in the front and red brick all around. I’ve been asked by her current pastor to return this Sunday night and reminisce, of sorts. Sadly, like so many Southern towns, the anchor of the community, the mill, has closed. Now a town that was struggling to survive is waiting for the inevitable. Because we need to know where we’ve been to know where we are headed, my job is share the impact a small United Methodist Church in a small mill village town can actually have. I
Friday, August 10, 2007
We're Famous

Well, not quite. Here's a link to the Augusta Chronicle story. You have to sign up, but it's free.
The photographer did a good job hiding my chins.
Thursday, August 2, 2007
Another Blog for You
I went to a Christian college, Erskine College. I went not because it was a Christian college but because it was a good school and my brother was an alumnus. At any rate, the guys in my dorm became great friends and so many of them are serving churches in their own traditions, Associate Reformed Presbyterian, Baptist, United Methodist, and me, an Episcopalian. At college we would stay up late at night sitting in the hall or at Lou’s, our favorite 24 hour diner, talking about life, love, and faith. Mostly we talked about the pursuit of the opposite sex. We are resurrecting those conversations 10 years later with the blog, Dormitory Dogma. Take a look and see how our conversation goes. If our conversations in the past are any indication, you will not want to miss this.
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